Click here for index to other issues.
Victor has been crunching numbers. The subject is Apak itself, in the most self-referential twist we've seen so far this year. Take a tour through the near-distant past of our printed edition in Fanzine Counts. (Web-caution: includes tables.)Greg Benford takes time out to sum up 25 years of writing in part two of his memoir, Hard Physics: The Many-Volume Series II.
Ted White speaks of ordinary work, shifting gender, and sums up the ongoing aggressive driving discussion in The Trickle-Down Theory of Dr. Fandom.
Lesley Reece signs up for A Three-Hour Tour.
Andy Hooper does some historical excavations of The Mounds of Brown.
Our correspondents join the conversation in the letter column.
We finish with Andy's Fanzine Countdown.
APPARATCHIK is the Brian G. Hughes of fandom, a Brooklyn banker and practical joker who loved to drop boxes of glass beads on the sidewalk in front of Tiffany's, who once announced a plan to exhibit a rare South American animal known as a "reetsa," which eluded capture despite running backwards. When reporters gathered at the quay, led down the gangway was -- of curse -- a steer. Apak is still available for the usual, but note that trades must be sent to both Andy and Victor (carl just wants the good ones, sent care of Andy), and/or you can get Apparatchik for $3.00 for a 3 month supply, or a year's worth for $12.00 or a lifetime subscription for $19.73, or in exchange for a bottle of orange Jarritos.
For readers in the United Kingdom, Martin Tudor will accept #10.00 for an annual subscription, #19.37 for a lifetime sub, from 24 Ravensbourne Grove, Off Clarke's Lane, Willenhall, West Midlands, WV13 1HX, UK. Australian readers can subscribe through Irwin Hirsh, 26 Jessamine Ave., East Prahran, Victoria 3181 Australia, for $4.50 (single issue), $17.00 (annual) and $28.09 (lifetime) Australian.
Visit number since January 8th, 1997.